14-YEAR-OLD MURDER CASE: Two Plead Not Guilty

TRIAL SET FOR SEPT. 23

Reta Flowers pleads not guilty to a charge of first-degree murder Wednesday before Washington County Magistrate Judge Ray Reynolds.
Reta Flowers pleads not guilty to a charge of first-degree murder Wednesday before Washington County Magistrate Judge Ray Reynolds.

— A former husband and wife entered not guilty pleas Wednesday in a 14-year-old murder case.

Reta Flowers and Raymond Douglas, both 41, pleaded not guilty to charges of first-degree murder in the death of Goldie Thornsberry.

Washington County Magistrate Judge Ray Reynolds accepted the pleas and set a Sept. 23 trial date. Both remain in the Washington County Detention Center in lieu of $250,000 bond.

Flowers is represented by the Washington County Public Defender’s Office. Douglas is represented by Ronald Davis, a lawyer from Little Rock. Washington County Prosecuting Attorney John Threet will prosecute the case.

Thornsberry, Flower’s mother, was last seen in Fayetteville in January 1996. She was reported missing March 7, 1996. Her remains were discovered by a land survey crew in a water well on a vacant lot in Little Rock on July 20, 2000. The remains were identified June 15 using DNA comparison to two of Thornsberry’s daughters.

Police said the remains had a cord fastened around the neck. The Arkansas State Medical Examiner’s Office determined the cause of death to be strangulation.

Thornsberry’s remains had injuries and surgical scars consistent with her medical records but were missing teeth, hands and a leg.

In March, the Little Rock Police Department’s Cold Case Division broadcast information on a TV station about the remains. The broadcast also featured a clay sculpture, based on a mold of the skull, that attempted to show what the victim looked like.

A former neighbor of Thornsberry saw the show, recognized the composite and called police.

Police and prosecutors say they believe the motive behind Thornsberry’s death was money.

On March 8, 1996, police initiated an investigation after discovering unusual bank transactions on Thornsberry’s bank account after she was reported missing by family members. Her car was found in the parking lot of Walmart on Sixth Street in Fayetteville in April 1996.

Flowers and Douglas, who lived with Thornsberry when she disappeared, were charged with second-degree forgery and pleaded guilty on Sept. 5, 1996.

Police said Thornsberry’s freezer was reported missing in March 1996 by family members after Flowers and Douglas moved out.

Flowers was living in southwest Little Rock and Douglas was living in Benton when they were arrested on the murder charges.

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